CiH wrote:From a previous forum posting by 1024MAK on the 3rd May 2010 addressed to Ali when she was talking about getting a new motorbike.

If you do get a bike be careful out on the roads.

Foreshadowing sucks..

Ali will be missed by a lot of people. I never knew her personally, but from her presence on the forum, you could tell that she was an exceptional lady in any walk of life. Condolences to her family and friends.

I'm very sorry about the event - the road traffic accident. I hoped when I posted my comments about her getting a motorbike that she could (and would) take the advice and learn from others.Of course we do not know the details and may never know why. I have to believe that she was careful and that her death was due to events beyond her control.So sad I do agree that we should have a site, and or some other online means of remembering her.

Mark

Alison had passed every advanced motorcycle test there was, even training with the police and getting the advanced rider certificate with them. The officer who trained her was even at her funeral in full police uniform along with many other bikers. The inquiry of the accident is still on going and both her mother and myself have opted to not know the details when they are released. However witness accounts state there was no excessive speed and that as the accident happened less than half a mile from home, her tires would have still been cold, she came to a corner and lost the front wheel through lack of grip and slid head on into a fire truck coming in the opposite direction. I'm told she would have been unconscious on impact and would not have suffered, she went into cardiac arrest on the way to hospital. The coroners report was that she died of massive chest injuries.

I know as a circuitracer and motordriver myself that once that frontwheel goes there is no saving the bikeor the situation. It just goes and you slide. I lost my bike with over 80 Km/h and just had a few blue spots.But with bikes you never know, even 40 Km/h can be fatal, it all depends how you fall...So not always speeding is an issue although people blame bikers to often of it.

BoNuS wrote:I know as a circuitracer and motordriver myself that once that frontwheel goes there is no saving the bikeor the situation. It just goes and you slide. I lost my bike with over 80 Km/h and just had a few blue spots.But with bikes you never know, even 40 Km/h can be fatal, it all depends how you fall...So not always speeding is an issue although people blame bikers to often of it.

Shame your gone Alison, I would have liked to have driven with you

The unique, young and beautiful always go first for some reason. She lost her life doing what she loved, that bike became her passion.

Being a techie, she had it stripped down in the living room many a time, modifying the dashboard and anything that could be modified.

This is such a shock, I only get a chance to visit the forums infrequently lately. I've never had any personal contact with Alison but I've always observed her as a very warm and genuine person. I read the posts in this thread with the gradually evaporating hope that this was all a misunderstanding, a case of mistaken identity. Sadly this hasn't been the case.

After only just finding this just today (I've been an occasional visitor till now) I've read every single tribute. I'm so sorry to hear this news. She certainly made quite an impact on this site. I didn't know her, but viewing her correspondences she came across to me as a very knowledgeable and very warm person. I first saw her postings a couple of years ago just before I signed up to this site. Life can be damned unfair sometimes. I concur with what Colin said at some point earlier in this thread that unique and talented people often die young. Well, why should it be. She sounded like a wonderful person and I am sorry that I didn't come to know her more.

Rest in peace Alison. Thank you for your contribution to a wonderful forum filled with some very interesting and unique people. You are missed dearly by those who knew you and those who loved you but also by those who were merely touched by you presence.

To her family, I am so sorry to hear of your loss and best wishes for the future. I hope that you can eventually get through the grief and find a way, somehow to live with the loss.

To Colin specifically, I am so sorry to hear of your loss. I do not know you but I just want to say, I hope you get through the grief no matter how long that will take. Regardless of a person's beliefs I've always believed that a loved one always stays with you, they are never gone even though we cannot see them. So I hope you are able to take some comfort in that. Best wishes and I look forward to corresponding with you in the future.

I am the master of cr*p signatures!Atari 1040 (4mb) STeAtari 520 STFM (with red LEDs and cooling fan)Atari 520 STe - boxed after being saved from Freecycle. Not yet played with. Collects emulators and software from all over the web for ATARI ST, AMIGA, & old consoles.Also a member of the http://www.pleasuredome.org.uk/ legal torrent tracker.

I have been away from the Atari scene since late last year, with just the occasional dipping in and out of the forum looking at the for sale. I came across a post about the sad passing of Alison for the first today. The blood drained from me and a cold chill passed over my body at the thought of what happened. I only knew Alison through the forum, but when I was buying a few things from her and she was making me TOS 2.06 chips I communicated a lot via PM's. I kinda felt I knew her well as she was very friendly with all her PM's. Heck she even sent me a postcard with the gamepad and said she loved postcards. I never sent one back and now feel bad about that. She was a great Atari figure on the forum here and I am deeply saddened by her passing. She will be missed immensely.